Nightmare on Dem Street

For months now people have been saying to me, "Do you really think they're
gone?" "Is it finally over?" "Is the coast clear?"

The questions have been in response to Barack Obama's supposedly yeoman
service in putting an end to the Clintons in public life.

My response to those who believe our long national nightmare is over has
always been: "Have you seen no monster movies?"

Freddy Krueger always comes back. Jason re-emerges from the pond one more
time. Dracula had so many comebacks, nobody was surprised to see him hanging
with Abbott and Costello.

Of course the Clintons will be back.

If the monster-movie thing is too offensive for you Clinton voluptuaries out
there, think of it like this: They're like Richard Gere in "An Officer and a
Gentleman" (who, coincidentally, is hounded by a charismatic black dude but
never gives up). They've got no place else to go.

And I was right. The Clintons are back. The coffin lid has sprung open, the
seal of the crypt has been broken, the mutant virus has escaped the lab.
Both Clintons will speak at the Democratic convention, and Hillary will get
her I-told-you-so's.

In the horror flicks, it's not that the creatures are impervious to damage,
it's that no matter how much you hack them up, they seem to come back again.
And again. And again. The Clintons have been horribly damaged, but they
press on.

Bill Clinton is no supernatural serial killer - faint praise to most, too
generous to a few. But he does have this juggernaut-like way of getting
where he wants to be. One of his special powers is superhuman
passive-aggressiveness. When recently asked if Obama was qualified to be
president, Clinton responded, "You can argue that nobody is ready to be
president." Pressed again about Obama's qualifications to be president,
Clinton explained, "I never said he wasn't qualified. The Constitution sets
qualification for the president. And then the people decide who they think
would be the better president."

Bill could have really added some oomph to that endorsement if he'd only
been willing to concede that Obama is a carbon-based life form meeting the
minimal requirements defined by scientists for sentient life.

But that's a lot to expect from the surrogate-in-chief for the Hillary
Clinton campaign. At least that's the impression one gets from the beautiful
corpse, or rather beautiful autopsy of the corpse, on display over at The
Atlantic. Like Richard Dreyfuss in "Jaws" ("This was no boating accident!"),
reporter Joshua Green picks through the internal e-mail viscera of the
Clinton campaign and finds that the destructive nature of the Clintons is
not always aimed at their enemies.

Indeed, shocking as this may be to people naive enough to believe that a
woman with no executive experience, no security clearance, no significant
successes under her belt, who was catapulted to presidential prominence
solely because her husband treated her like a cautionary tale in a
country-music song, was nonetheless a co-president for eight years: It turns
out that the Bride of Clintonstein was an awful chief executive. Infected by
her husband's passive-aggressiveness, she stood paralyzed as the HMS Hillary
took on more and more water, until even the string quartet on the deck was
leaping for the flotation devices.

As Green pulls memo after memo from the great white's carcass like so many
Florida license plates, we discover that the Clintons knew long, long ago
that they couldn't beat Barack Obama to the nomination. But winning was
secondary, carnage was king. You might even say of her decision to stay in
the race: This was no polling accident.

The Clintons adopted a deliberate strategy of diminishing Obama's victories,
and Mark Penn, Clinton's trusted campaign manager, pushed for a strategy of
ridiculing their black, funny-named opponent as insufficiently American.
Such memos, if found in the underbelly of a Republican campaign, would be
immortalized by the liberal establishment as permanent proof of conservative
racism. When plucked from the bowels of a Democratic campaign, the response
is some mild tsk-tsking.

But fixating on the plot is never a good idea with monster flicks. The point
is that the story is always the same. And so it is this time as well. Bill
and Hillary are back. And forever more, Barack Obama won't be able to take a
shower without fear of that curtain snapping back, as a woman - or is that a
man? - prepares to plunge the knife into his back.

Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online,and the author of the book The Tyranny of Clichés. You can reach him via Twitter @JonahNRO.
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